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SUNDAY, FE&ftUAftY 1 1$SS
THE DAILY YAR Hell
PAGE THREE
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Covering The University Campus
riiiLoou'AL ci.ut
Prof. VV. L. Wiley of the Romance
I.anuaiics Department will present
n p.iper. The Paris Theatre Audi
ence of the 17th Century." at the
Philocical Club Tuesday. 7:3() p.m.
in the library assembly room. Fac
ulty and graduate students and their
fatuities are iinitcd to attend.
COSMOPOLITAN CIA It
The Cosmopolitan Club will pres
ent slides of the 1!)."7 Moscow Youth
festival at its meeting today in the
Library Assembly Hoom. Andy
P.l.ine. delegate to the fcsthal. will
speak at the informal "net acqu
ainted" tea.
A Gal, to tarn a whiskered beast
ShoOld tend ten Valentines, at
leavl.
The Intimate Bookshop
205 East Franklin St.
Open Till 10 p.m.
Dr. Fridoon Antia from Bombay,
India will also speak after the dutch
supper in upstairs Lenoir Hall. r.
Antia is an economist who studies
at Geneva, the Sorbonne and the
j London School of Economics,
j The public is invited to attend.
j OXFORD SCHOLAR TO SPEAK
i Prof. Ronald Syme of Oxford Uni
J versify will visit UNC this weekend
, and give a public lecture Monday.
I at 8 p.m. in 105 Gardner Hall,
j "The Romans and Spain" will be
'the title of his talk, which will be
'sponsored by the L'NC Classics De
partment.
I' A CI LTV ( Lin LUNCHEON
! Di;. Everett Palmatier, chairman
of the Physics Department, will ad
dress the Faculty Club Luncheon
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Carolina Inn.
PI SIGMA ALPHA
j Current economic development of
; India will be discussed at a meeting
by Dr. Fredoon Antia of Bombay
r
' for
Valentiwsdaij
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AMFRtCAtsl GREETINGS
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DAILY
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at 9 p.m. in 105 Caldwelt Hall, Mon.
day.
Dr. Antia is manager of the Ce
ment Marketing Company of India.
He earned .his doetor's degree at
the London School of Economics and
has attended universities in Geneva,
Berlin and the Sorbonne.
The meeting is sponsored by Pi
Sigma Alpha, political science
fraternity.
TRADING POST OPENS
Alpha Phi Omega is now operat
ing its Trading Post for used books
in the cabinet room of the YMCA
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Students may
bring their books, which the APO
will sell at the requested price plus
a nominal handling charge, through
Tuesday.
ANCIENT AFRICAN ART
The exhibition of ancient African
art will close today at the" Person
Hall Art Gallery. The public is in
vited to a talk on the exhibition
3 p-m- Kenneth Nss. acting chair
man of the Art Department, will ex
plain the art and other factors
relating to the exhibited works. The
gallery is open from 8:30 a.m.. to
5:30 p.m. daily and from 2:30 p.m.
I to 5 p.m. on Sundays.
! NURSING C.RADS
UNC has been notified that worn
! en graduates who hold the degree
' of bachelor of science in nursing
are eligible for membership in the
American Association of University
Women.
As a result of action taken by the
Committee on Standards and Recog
nition of Colleges and Universities
of the AAUW. all graduates of the
j UNC School of Nursing, regardless
of date of graduation, are eligible
for membership.
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U. S. 'AAoon' Proves A Success
Soaring Around Thre World
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ORGANIST ROBERT BAKER OF NEW YORK
His- Recital To Dedftate New UNC Organ Console
Organ Recital Tuesday
To Dedicate Console
Fires
(Continued from Page 1)
PSYCHIATRIC TREATMENT
At the trial yesterday, Satter
white's mother proclaimed that
Satterwhite did not know what he
was doing, and Judge Stewart
said that the boy would be able to
get psychiatric assistance in his
cell.
After the trial, Satterwhite
started talking about the fires, and
by the time he had arrived at Hill-
boro, he had admitted to setting
the fires in the past few weeks that
the police attributed to arson.
The new Reuter Organ Console
in Hill Music Hall will be dedicated
at a special recital on Tuesday
night at 8 o'oclock.
Robert Baker, an outstanding
American organist, will be the guest
artist for the program, one of the
Tuesday Evening Series. The public
is invited to attend without charge.
In addition to teaching organ at
the Union Theological Seminary. Dr.
Baker is organist at the Fifth
Avenue Presbyterian Church and
the Temple Emanu-El in New York.
He has appeared on many univer
sity campuses as recitalist and lecturer.
His Tuesday night program, chos
en to best make use of the Reuter
Organ's musical possibilitis, is divid
ed into three groups of composi
tions, beginning with the baroque
period.
Handel's Concerto No. 1, in G
Major, aud Bach's Prelude and
Fugue in B Minor will be .included,
along with works by Dietrich Bux
tehude and Jean Phillipe Rameau.
Other selections on the program
are by Darius Milhaud, Cesar
Franck, Jean Langlais, Alfred Hol-
lins, Samuel Barber, Johann Chris
tian Rinck and Joseph Jongen.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 (Ameri
ca's first1 space satellite proved it
self .a success today. .
It is soaring around the earth
high enough 200 to 1,700 miles
to stay in space a long time, at
least several months and possibly
10 years.
Its path is "quite satisfactorily
close" to what had been planned, its
delighted scientific godfathers said.
They told newsmen they didn't
know of a thing that had gone
wrong.
The satellite is not easy to see,
but observers in the Southern United
States may spot it with field glasses.
It has already radioed back to the
earth some information about tem
perature, and also cosmic rays and
possibly about meteorites, two of
the principal mysteries of space
that "Explorer" was sent aloft to
look into. Its steady "E-E-E-E-E"
broadcast is regularly being picked
up by the world-girdling chain of
tracking stations.
And it was already plain that the
success of the pencil-shaped moonlet
and the bulky rocket system that
hurled it on its 18,000-miles-an-hour
course was serving as a strong
tonic to the United States' confi
dence in its own technical ability.
This confidence of Americans and
some of their friends had been sent.,
into shock by Soviet satellite success
and the failure ofthe first U. S.
effort. '
President Eisenhower's "That's
wonderful!" seemed to sum up the
national mood.
The elation went around the free
world, inspiring fat headlines in
Western Europe and a shout of
congratulations from a Japanese
scientist.
A Soviet spokesman said, "We
congratulate you." A Soviet scien
tist said the third Sputnik will be
launched soon.
A crowd of 10,000 joyfully demon
strated" last night at Huntsville,
Ala., home of the Army Ballistic
Missile Agency which produced Ex
plorer. In Washington, delight shone
through the careful words of a panel
of scientists assembled to answer
newsmen's questions. Congressional
leaders mixed congratulations with"
exhortations to push ahead quickly
in the competition for space.
If You Adore Your Valentine
Send Her a Book & Keep Her
Thine
The Intimate Bookshop
205 East Franklin St.
Open Till 10 p.m.
Junior Year
in
New York
An vnusvaf one-year
cofege program
See your cfean
or writ
for brochure tot
BeanF.H.MsClosfcey
Washington Square
College
New Yerk University
New York 3, N.Y.
SERVE YOURSELF
Satellite Comparison
u.
Here is a
S. satellite
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
comparison of . the Soviet Union's two satellites and the
Speed
Altitude
Weight
Length
Diameter
Orbit Time
Max.
Explorer Sputnik I
18,000-19,400 mph 18,000 mph
1,700 miles
30.8 pounds
80 inches
6 inches
106-113 minutes
560 miles
184 pounds
23 inches
23 inches
90.2 minutes
Sputnik II
17,840 mph
1,056 miles
1,120.29 pounds
Unknown
Unknown
103.52 minutes
BUFFET
At Th
EVERY SUNDAY
5:30-7:30 P.M.
Ill
J :y
RANCH HOUSE
HOME OF CHOICE HICKORY-SMOKED CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
I-
p
filmed In 'TafflMaSU&3flA?.-; -W-.'-.W
TECHflJCOlCB" presented by WAffi KSt
PATRICIA OWENS - RED BUTTOXS
RICARDO UOHTALBhM-limU SCQTTl
MJWSHJ VMKl JAMES GARNER
Foreign Film Series
Begins This Thursday
Tickets for the Graham Memorial
Foreign Film Series are now on
sale at the GM Information Desk.
A ticket for the series, which in
cludes eight films, costs $2 and can
! also be purchased at the door be
fore the showing of the first film.
The films scheduled for this se
mester are: "Mr. Hulot's Holiday"
(French, Feb. 6). "Border Street"
(Polish. Feb. 20, "Forgotten Vil
lage" (Mexican, March 6. "Top-
laze (French, ftiarcn u.
"Ten Days That Shook the World"
(Russian. April 10). an evening of
experimental films (April 24), "The
Male Brute" (French. May 1 and
"Angclo" (Italian. May 15 1.
uutuAtoaiuer.-...,... - '!''
I
(Continued from Page I)
were told at a news conference
of civilian scientists in the program
that "The name of this particular
satellite is 1938 Alpha."
This, cf course, seemed to sug
gest the scientists might "call the
second U. S. satellite "Beta," the
second letter of the Greek Alpha
bet. .Meanwhile, the Army was still
trying to decide oh a new name for
the rocket launching vehicle, still
designated as "JupiterC." Among
th? names under consideration is
that of "Juno," the consort of
the mythical Jupiter who, like Jup
iter, represented light and fire.
Dr. Moller Set
To Lecture On
Earth Satellites
Dr. Christian Moller. a Danish
j scientist and authority in the field
i of artificial earth satellities, will
deliver four lectures this month
here and at Duke University.
Dr. Moller, a professor at the
University of Copenhagen, has been
doing research at the UNC for the
past two months. The project is
sponsored by the Institute of Field
Physics, a privately financed pro
ject for studies in gravitation.
DrV Moller will speak on Monday
at a seminar in the UNC Physics
Department. He will lecture at
Duke on Feb. 5 and Feb. 10, and
again in Chapel Hill on Feb. 17.
kki INTRODUCING
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DIRECTED 8r
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BASED ON THE NOYFl BY S,C,R,11
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UNC Med Student Admits Recent Fires
(Continued from Page 1)
he told police that he had gone
to Durham, and changed the li
cense plates.
Police continued questioning !
Satterwhite until about 1 a.m. Sat
urday during which time he ex
plained these periods of emotion
al build-up and how he had found j
some relief in his childhood by
breaking bottles. When he grew
older, Satterwhite recalled taking
long drives, which would give him
partial release from the emotional
pressure.
Under police questioning, and
with the- help of UNC student
Owen Leland, who saw Satterwhite
il Hill Hall the night police
found two pianos soaked in oil,
he admitted being in the building,
and leaving whe Leland threatened
to call police. He did not admit
spreading the oil until yesterday
afternoon
Va
The police found out that Sat
terwhite had paid for a semester's
use of one of the music practice
rooms in Hill Hall.
NEAR SCENE OF BLAZES
Satterwhite told conflicting stor
ies to police Friday night about
his whereabouts en Jan. 9, the
night when six fires occurred on
the university campus. However,
he admitted to Sgt. Coy. E. Dur
ham that he had been eating at
Carolina Inn thaf evening. The Inn
was the scene of three of the fires
that occurred that night.
Sgt. Durham also, reported that
he had seen Satterwhite at the
scene of the Swain Hall fire.
Satterwhite said that he had not
previously undergone psychiatric
treatment.
Capt. W. I). Blake t)f the police
department said that Satterwhite
broke into the Carmichiel resi
dence by cutting open a screen
land opening a window.
If
Dean of Student Affairs Fred
Weaver said that Satterwhite Had
a good scholastic record both as
it lifwWorra.liiafe and as a first
vw v a fy - -
vgif medical student.
Satterwhite told police that he
did not fhink of getting caught
biif only of the idea that he had
to set these fires to relieve the em-
totiond pressure that was upon
him. He said that he believed he
A Aa if hp hndn't set the
nuuiu V v. .
fires.
He told police also that he did
not seek psychiatric aid because
he was afraid of going to a psy
chiatrist.
lie was described as being
somewhat emotionally unbalanced,
and police reported on Saturday
...v,;t v,i lnncnc nf memory as
n uiiv iivi .'f
well as telling conflicting stories
under questioning.
Blake said that despite the con
flicting stories, . Satterwhite was
quite cooperative when being
questioned.
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SENTIMENTAL
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